‘I’m scared’, Fly had said. He was never scared. He was her hero.
Her rugged hero made up from all the romance books she’d read. Big,
bold and beautiful—in an alien kind of way.

Jenny's from Earth. Fly's from Itor. By a quirk of fate they met.
She tamed him and they fell in love. They live idyllic lives in a
protected corner of the world away from the wolf-like people and savage
tribes of Neanderthals, and when Jenny discovers she’s pregnant they
feel things can’t get any more perfect.

But things are changing outside their little kingdom. The
wolf-people are disbanding and someone, or something, appears to be
hunting the Neanderthals. Fly makes provisions to protect all that’s
dear to him, but then he just doesn’t return home. Jenny knows he’s
alive somewhere, but alone with her baby daughter, is she equipped to
deal with the new horror that awaits her?

This sequel will have you turning the pages wondering if happy ever afters are possible in this conclusion to Eden.

Monday, 23 November 2015

The Darwinian Theory of Evolution is probably the most contentious
scientific theory in the human history. Supporters revere it as the most
magnificent and beautiful of theories. That being said, only a very
small handful of people truly understand the meaning of Darwinism and
neo-Darwinism as well as what they encompass. The majority of people
only have scant knowledge of the theories, having only heard about them
during biology classes, via mainstream media or through accolades from
the scientific community. Consequently, they blindly believe whatever
others say.

The purpose of this book is to enlighten readers to the fact that Darwinism is not the great theory it is made out to be. Rather, it is a lie – compounded by fantasy, imagination and contradictions. This theory has already been disproved by science in the succeeding century, but due to the mainstream scientific community’s sophistry and play on semantics, it has become entrenched as a flawless theory when it is in reality, a false science.

The first few articles in this book serve to introduce neo-Darwinism as well as analyze and evaluate the same, so that readers can grasp what this theory is all about. The Darwinian theoreticians often point out that their theory is supported by a vast amount of scientific evidence. In this book, the author illuminates us by dissecting this so-called modern scientific evidence and revealing it to be misleading, irrelevant and far-fetched.

A salient characteristic of a scientific theory is the inherent possibility to prove it to be false, also known as falsifiability. It follows then that a theory that is not falsifiable must be false science. Another reason why neo-Darwinism is perplexing is this – on the surface, it appears to be a scientific theory but in reality it is not falsifiable - it is merely a theory “masquerading” itself as science.

This book has also used several articles to analyze the harm and suffering inflicted on humanity as a consequence of the Darwinian theory and “Social Darwinism” (that derived from it). The Chinese are precisely the victims of this theory.

The first edition (Chinese) of this book was published in 2012 by Guangming Daily Press. In this English edition, 5 new articles and several illustrations were added, totaling 38 articles in all.

Just one moment, as the leaves turned from green to red and the breeze carried on its back the cool embrace of Autumn, set in motion a life-changing spiralling effect…

As
Alice is drawn down the path paved for her by Red—Lord Overseer,
Wonderland’s King of Hearts—her world begins to twist and change. The
tranquillity of a simple life is left behind as she chooses to fall; a
descent that seems never-ending but which takes her that little bit
closer to the only real love she has ever known—and the life she has
dared to dream.

As the earth tilts on its axis and Alice’s perspective becomes distorted and dizzying, she must face sacrificing everything she has ever known and face the Queen of Hearts with one objective: dethrone her. If she succeeds, the King of Hearts awaits. But if she fails, Alice could find herself lost in a world where everything is nonsense.

Friday, 20 November 2015

The patient had charcoal-black eyes, hard and cold, as
if rounded chunks of volcanic rock had been shoved inside her eye sockets. Her
skin possessed a sickly white pallor, as if it had been sucked dry of all its
nutrients and hung up on a clothesline. Dark veins crawled over her body like
wriggling snakes, pulsing with every unsteady heartbeat. Her mouth hung open,
and a pockmarked grey tongue dangled uselessly over her lower lip. Her
bedridden form emitted the stench of necrotic flesh.

Glenda Alvarez was sixty-three years old, young
compared to the other residents. Just last week, she’d had her hair permed and
her nails manicured. The virus had hit fast.

It wouldn’t be long. She was just another unlucky
victim of a plague that took no prisoners. She had all the symptoms of the
toxicity passing through humanity, turning live bodies into black-eyed
corpses.

The Black Virus. And somehow… somehow, Gabriel Schist was supposed to stop it.

The rain had stopped, but the moonlit ground was still
covered in a glimmering sheen of moisture. Grimacing, Gabriel turned away from
the open bedroom window, which was his lens to Glenda’s decline. He buttoned up
his coat, hesitated, halfway unbuttoned it, then buttoned it up again.

He hobbled over to the smoking gazebo and lowered
himself into the seat. His legs were rickety, and a sharp pain shot through his
knee. His lower back felt as if the nerves were being pinched by a steel
clamp.

He took out a pack of cigarettes and patted down his
jacket for a lighter. It was in his inner pocket. When the flame sparked, he
buried the smoke deep inside his chest, baking his lungs. His cigarette
twitched unsteadily between two shaking fingers. Already, it was burning down,
dissipating into nothing. Its tobacco-filled life was short and empty. It
served one purpose, and then it died.

Gabriel Schist is spending his remaining
years at Bright New Day, a nursing home.

He once won the Nobel Prize for
inventing a vaccine for AIDS. But now, he has Alzheimer’s, and his mind is
slowly slipping away.

When one of the residents comes down with a
horrific virus, Gabriel realizes that he is the only one who can find a cure. Encouraged by Victor, an odd stranger, he convinces the administrator to allow
him to study the virus. Soon, reality begins to shift, and Gabriel’s
hallucinations interfere with his work.As the death count mounts, Gabriel is in a
race against the clock and his own mind.

Can he find a cure before his brain
deteriorates past the point of no return?

Nicholas Conley's passion
for storytelling began at an early age, prompted by a love of science fiction
novels, comic books and horror movies. His upcoming novel Pale Highway is influenced by his
experience working with Alzheimer's patients in a nursing home, a subject that
he has also written about for publications such as Vox.
When not busy writing, Nicholas spends his time reading, traveling to new
places, and indulging in a lifelong coffee habit.

In order to better establish himself on the
planet Earth, Nicholas has currently made his home in New Hampshire. More
information on Nicholas can be found on his website, www.NicholasConley.com.